Index 



401 



Bodin, Jean, 36, 37, 39, 250, 



375 



Borgia, Cesare, 35 



Bosnia, 100 



Brazil, 100 



British Empire, founded upon 

 force, 44; period of expan- 

 sion, 45; boundaries of, loi; 

 example of federation, 130; 

 abolition of slavery in, 205; 

 see Canada, Australia, New 

 Zealand, India 



British South African Com- 

 pany, 48 



Broda, Prof. R., 340 



Brussels, 317 



Bryce, James, 247 



Buckle, 29 



Buddhism, 335 



Burr, Aaron, 127 



Ccesar, 129 



Cain and Abel, 74 



Calvin, 207 



Canada, loi, 166 



Cannibalism, 80, 185 



Carlyle, 26, 27 



Castellio, 207 



Cataclysmic theory, 115, 137, 



139, 142-3, 145-7, 155. 208-9 

 Catholic and Protestant 



struggles in Holland, 188; 



see also Religious Wars 

 Causality, direct bond of, 135- 



7 



Cave-men, 64 



Cecil, Lord Hugh, on opposi- 

 tion between morality and 

 national self-interest, 340 



Censorship of press, 217 



Centralization confused with 

 federation, 131 



Chaldeans, xi, 173 



Chamberlain, 40 



Charity, undesirable according 

 to "Social Darwinism, " 328- 

 30; necessary according to 

 Darwin, 331 



Chastity, rational basis of, 354 



Chesterton, G. K., 348 



ad 



Chicago, 100 



Chile and Peru, 344-5 



China, influence of philosophy 



of force in, 45; economic 



effect of floods upon outside 



world, 99; return of Boxer 



indemnity, 346 

 Christianity, Kingsley on war 



and, 26; and the philosophy 



of force, 266-7 

 Churchill, Lord Winston, 122- 



3,346 

 Civil War of 1861, 105, 135, 



2?5 



Civilist and militarist defined, 



.249 



Civilization, security of, ix; 

 ancient, x; aids higher life, 

 8; war indispensable to, 70; 

 result of co-operation, 96; 

 civil and foreign wars aff"ect 

 it differently, loi; produced 

 by preparedness, 122-3; war 

 retards, 124; produced by 

 war, 133; has made slavery, 

 159; primitive, 165; war 

 requires state of advanced, 

 170; dechne of force in ad- 

 vancing, 189, 210; result of 

 education, 203; produced by 

 co-operation and division of 

 labour, 210; reconstructed, 

 227; dependent upon justice, 



379 



Colbron, Grace Isabel, 265 



Collective homicide, and war, 

 9; cause of progress, 62, 91-2, 

 268; civilization and, 104; 

 means to an end, no; and 

 struggle between nationali- 

 ties, 145; and backward 

 races, 203; effect of war 

 upon doctrine of, 220; see 

 also War 



Collective selection, 142, 146, 

 148, 150, 151 



Colonialism and nationalism, 

 251. 



Colonies, supposed economic 

 advantages of, 112 



